augment Posted March 29, 2006 Posted March 29, 2006 If I buy a microscope is there anything I could really do with it to study cells and what not? What's would be a good microscope to buy? Thanks. -John
YT2095 Posted March 29, 2006 Posted March 29, 2006 well I tend to use mine for Crystal examination most of the time in Chemistry, but yeah, cells are good too if you enjoy that kind of thing, and pond life is also fascinating. I use a 900x mag and that`s more than enough for my uses and applications
augment Posted March 30, 2006 Author Posted March 30, 2006 What exactly could I do with a microschope? Prolly just look at them hey.
FreeThinker Posted March 30, 2006 Posted March 30, 2006 What exactly could I do with a microschope? Prolly just look at them hey. You could always get a Biology book and observe where each part of the cell, in unicellular organism, is located.
YT2095 Posted March 31, 2006 Posted March 31, 2006 it`s also good to have a polarised film that the light passes through, and often usefull to have the option of Top Lighting an object too. top lighting allows you to view things like Microchips where the light cannot pass through the substrate, and a polarising film adds an entirely new dimension to looking at Crystals
2810712 Posted April 4, 2006 Posted April 4, 2006 U can...see how are microbes distributed in different types of media... try to guess the type of microbe from how it appears and where it has been found [ get good biobooks for it] Now u can prepare ur own media and get the microbe resistant media for you...resistant to all [ eg. high salt soln] or resistant to some...[ prepare 5-6 media wich ONLY diff. salt conc. ( atleast try ur best) and see some types would be still surviving in high salt thing! mark their morphology and in this way u can get the range of salt conc. for which some types are adapted to] U can have natural selection in ur cups... keep them in low temp or LITTLE higher salt conc. and those surviving there...let them grow for some days...then again increase salt-conc. a little and do the same again...and in such a way salt-grow-salt- manner you can select salt-living microbes! U may also possibly use plant and animal cells ocassionally. Here I've taken high salt thing. U can use low temp./ diff. salts or chemicals u may get/ combinations of these/ light intensity / time of light-exposure/ effect of music on them! etc. U can use Neem extracts, Haldi powder, soap, detergents, and combos of all of above!!! CAn observe INSECTS, one of my friends did it...they are HORRIblesome sometimes!!! Reveal the new HORRIzons of monster worlds for u and ur frendz! Yeah, somebody really said oberving crystals!!! nice too...it also needs analytical mind!!! Best Wishes!!! hrushikesh
augment Posted April 4, 2006 Author Posted April 4, 2006 What would be a good microscope to buy though?
2810712 Posted April 5, 2006 Posted April 5, 2006 compound microscope...but i don't know any cost Vs goodness of microscope [ in terms of resolution and magnification ]... is there somebody to tell that... hrushikesh
intothevoidx Posted April 7, 2006 Posted April 7, 2006 I was recently looking at this one.....http://cgi.ebay.com/BINOCULAR-COMPOUND-BIOLOGICAL-MICROSCOPE-MECH-STAGE_W0QQitemZ7605579593QQcategoryZ71407QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
theMaharajah Posted April 7, 2006 Posted April 7, 2006 Go to your local high school and ask a teacher where they get thier labs from. I sound like the guy from Reading Rainbow.
scicop Posted April 20, 2006 Posted April 20, 2006 Well it all depends on your budget!! I've ordered/used microscopes that cost more than a house in an NYC suburb! I'm a fan of Carl Zeiss mics. Good set-up is about 40 to 50K. A good confocal setup will run you over 120K. Used an electron microscope by philips (CM10) that was about 400K. Usually Confocals and TEM/SEM types of microscopes are purchased for facility purposes, although some rich labs (like HHMI funded labs) have their own. Thats FYI. but as far as experiments..not much you can do with a light microcope. You can explore your enviroment, go down to the local pond, take some samples and see what's there! That's what I did as a kid. Yup..still a geek.
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